Sunday, June 7, 2009

Method Man & Redman - Blackout 2 (Rapidshare, Megaupload, etc




Disapointing album? Read what they're saying:

Redman and Method Man have managed to release a good quantity of solid albums since 1992 -- 12 albums between them (how much more consistent can you get?) They're both gifted lyricists who always complement each other well. Meth is warm yet flavorful, even when he's rhyming about the drollest subject. Red is sharp, witty, and charismatic. Together they're one of hip-hop's most formidable duos.

Blackout 2! finds these funny stoners reminiscing about fun times on every other song. The UGK-assisted hit "City Lights" is the most balanced crossover song you'll hear all year, yet pretty damn funny. "Mrs. International," on the other hand, is rife with rap cliches. Typically, however, none of the many other champs here scores big.

Blackout! 2 is a disappointing effort from two great MCs who are capable of so much more. Read the full review...

Old link died (again), here's the new one, let me know if it stops working:
http://www.mediafire.com/?tmfz4ynmumu

Eminem - Relapse (Deluxe) - Rapidshare | Megaupload

Your Review:

May 19, 2009 - "Em, it's Paul. I just listened to the entire album, and you've gotta be f****** kidding me. I mean, with this Christopher Reeve s***. You know the guy's dead, right? And then the whole gay stepfather / incest / rape thing? I don't have your back on this with. I can't even f****** handle it. I'm done."

After four years away from the industry – four years of incredible social change and personal upheaval – hip-hop icon Eminem returns with Relapse, an exceptionally well-produced, well-performed album that feels almost ridiculously stuck in the past. In fact, there are at least a half-dozen references throughout Relapse in which the album acknowledges its own frustrating tendency to retread familiar ground – from a handful of Christopher Reeve references ("Medicine Ball"), to songs about Em's mother ("My Mom"), to tracks about murder and mayhem ("Same Song and Dance"). Thematically, and certainly in terms of its overall quality, the album fits somewhere between Slim Shady and Marshall Mathers, but Em's refusal to mature as both a person and performer, as well as his insistence upon maintaining the same old posture, ultimately handicap the album from being what it quite possibly could have been – Eminem's greatest record yet. Read full review


Here's the mediafire link:

http://www.mediafire.com/?tmfz4ynmumu

Let me know how it stops working with a comment.